Dip your strips of patching cloth in a liquid mix- as much or as little of it as you need for the amount of patching you are treating. Then lay the strips out on wax paper on a flat board, or countertop, and use a rubber ink roller, or a rolling pin, ( A " Squeegee ", for cleaning windows will also work. Just don't press as hard as you would on glass. You are simply trying to distribute the fluid equally in the cloth, and move excess fluid to the side of the cloth so it can be recovered or disposed of. )to press the liquid evenly through out the strips. The excess liquid can be poured back into the mix bowl, or disposed of in your sink.
When you have done that, take the strips and lay them on a cookie sheet, and put them in a sunny window, or outside - say on the roof of the car in the sun to dry. Once they are dried, the material feels oily, but not excessive. You can then roll the strips up, tie them with strings or rubber bands, and put them in something like a tin, or plastic bag for storage. Take what you need for a day at the range, or in the field.
If you use a loading block, you can cut your patches on the loading block, and leave the rest of the material at home.
I would recommend carrying a bottle of your lube mix with you, so that you can " freshen " the mix in the patches, if they have been in the loading block very long. The wood in the block will absorb some of the oil and that can change the properties of the lubed patching.
Keep a used spray bottle from some other product and fill the bottle with your mix, so you can just " mist" the bottom of the PRB as it sits in the ball block, before you drive it down the barrel.
Don't hang the strips over a pole, or clothes line, as this will allow the oil to sink to the lower ends and leave the middle dry of oil. Lay the strips flat for drying. Work up your own mix formula.
I have heard everything used from 5:1, to 6:1, to 7:1, water to Ballistol. I suspect the difference has to do with the thickness of the patching in relation to the diameter of the ball used and the diameter of the bore, or due to variations in relative humidity from one area of this country to another, and from one season to another.
Putting some of the mix in a spray bottle and taking it with you to the range, or even in the car or truck when you go hunting just makes sense. If you feel the patch seems too dry compared to what you have been used to, spritz the remaining balls in your ball block before you go into the field. NO? :thumbsup: